Youtube comments of deezel_fairy (@deezelfairy).
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@raulrse He's not a scumbag mechanic, he's talking from experience.
I'm a forklift mechanic but the same shit applies. I will generally try to avoid doing thousands of dollars of repairs on a machine that worth it's weight in scrap iron except in some very rare circumstances.
Reason being it rarely ends well, what starts out as $3k worth of repair ends up becoming $5k because off all the f@&ked ancillary stuff that's in the way that has to come off such as bolts breaking, hoses having to be cut off because they're so hard and perished, corroded hose tails disentergating in your hands, old brittle wiring that snaps as soon as you breathe on it - the list goes on.
At the end you wind up with a massive bill no one wants to pay, your pissed off, the customers pissed off and it's not like you've even got a good machine at the end of it, you've got a pile of scrap that's had $5K chucked at it.
Trust me, jobs like that is how you LOOSE customers, not win them.
And for the record, there are just as many scummy, scammy customers as there are scummy, scammy mechanics.
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KJohn060 Pointless argument as I wouldn't offer terms of service like that and I think your a damn fool to accept such policies willingly. I get that it may be the case with most electronic devices but that doesn't make it right, and only the consumers can create the sort of pressure that creates change.
My terms of service would be if its out of warranty, then whatever, your paying for the repair regardless, I'd inform you if the repair was going to cost close too or exceed value/replacement and work with you to work out the best option for you, but if you insisted on still having it repaired and were prepared to pay for it then sure, I'll gladly take your hard earned cash.
If it was under warranty and I can prove you opened the thing up, kiss good bye to said warranty and any hope of a FREE repair (only a whining, me me me, something for nothing type would argue with that) , but I'd still fix the thing, your just paying for it.
The only situation I can think where I would outright refuse service was if you were aggresive or insulting me.
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I am noticing this 'thinking issue' more and more. I'm a forklift truck engineer, the job is all problem solving and fault diagnosis (usually without the recommended diagnostic equipment or correct special tools).
The amount of 'just graduated apprentices' who are on the job that are useless is staggering. They have no common sense and they cannot deal with fresh problems. Like this video says, they haven't been taught how to think! You can never have all the knowledge, there is too much and it's always changing, you have to work it out for yourself.
Im only 32 and never went to college, I was taught on the job by various gristled old men with leathery faces, scarred hands and scruffy beards, a couple of them were barely literate.
But what they taught me was only 30% knowledge, what they really taught me was mindset, attitude and HOW TO THINK! They made me a problem solver, a person who takes on the challenge when others give up. I might get it done slower then someone who has that bit of 'specific' knowledge but you can throw anything in my path, and I'll figure it out and get it done.
Those 'old men' made me who i am, and I could never repay my debt to them for moulding me into one of the highest paid proffesionals in my trade, in my local area.
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Yup, I'm a forklift mechanic and the piles of junk get the hairs on the back of my neck standing up, because I know its coming - "You serviced my truck 6 weeks ago, now my spotlights don't work, its got to be something you done", "You serviced my truck 6 weeks ago, now its blowing smoke, got to be something you done " ect, ect blah, blah, blah.
Drives ya nuts...
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Heavy equipment mechanic here, and what you're saying op isn't exactly true.
TLDR - The current resurgence of popularity of old mechanical machines is due to supply and demand issues, not right to repair in most cases.
There are several reasons a lot of old, worn-out mechanical equipment is being dragged out of fields, auctioned, refurbished, and sold. I can tell you as someone in the front line of the industry that in 95% of cases, right to repair/complicated electronics has nothing to do with it.
The biggest issue is the availability of new equipment atm. Since Covid (for various reasons), there is still a huge backlog of orders of new machines with wait times of 12-18mths on average. Also, with increasing inflation, the cost of new machines has increased tremendously. So now you have to pay a lot more and wait a lot longer for a new piece of equipment.
So just buy a good 5-10 year old 2nd hand machine? Good luck with that. Supply and demand is a bitch. Prices of 2nd hand equipment have gone through the roof and the supply is short because of the new equipment price/wait times.
This is where the old, worn-out, mechanical machines come in. Pre covid/inflation crisis these machines simply weren't economically viable to refurbish and put back to work - it's a very expensive and time intensive process to end up with a machine that's less fuel efficient, less reliable, slower to operate/less productive and much higher maintenance. It made far more economic sense to just buy a good 5-10yr old 2nd hand machine. However, since the current market pricing/supply issues, refurbishing this old equipment has become somewhat viable again.
One thing will never change though, old machines are f@@king money pits if they're being worked hard on high hours work schedule's.
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@althealligator1467 Come on man, she was 24, not 14!
I could understand the desperate situation she was in side of you points if she was a high school teenager but she was already 6 years into adulthood, she shouldnt have still been dependant on her parents at that age.
Parents being arseholes or not if they threatened her to conform to their ways or disown her, at 24 you leave and find your own way in life, you know, like a grown up? 🤣
I left home at 19, come home from work one day and was basically told by my parents that their seperating, selling the house and I (and my brother) need to find somewhere to live, no financial help, no nothing. I didn't consider killing them to claim their estate 😂. It was the day I had to grow up and start being a fckn man!
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The scariest thing about covid-19 here in the UK isn't the viruses itself, it's how people are reacting.
Virtually impossible to get food atm, people have took to panic buying/hoarding on a rediculous scale - there's no shortage of food, just people buying 5 x more than they need so production/logistics simply can't keep up.
Most of us here in the UK have tiny homes with no land so 'self reliance' isn't really an option.
It's starting to divide society there, I'm in the group of 'buy what you need, don't be a selfish a-hole, don't waste anything and there will be enough to go around'.
The other half are 'screw everyone, I'm OK, if you didn't panic buy your stupid and deserve to starve, natural selection blah blah blah..' - no joke, it's amazing how the human brain is so incredible at rationalising sh@ty behaviour.
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